Ramya Raghavendra, Jorge Lobo, et al.
SIGCOMM 2012
We investigate schemes for achieving service differentiation via weighted end-to-end congestion control mechanisms within the framework of the additive-increase-multiplicative-decrease (AIMD) principle, and study their performance as instantiations of the TCP protocol. Our first approach considers a class of weighted AIMD algorithms. This approach does not scale well in practice because it leads to excessive loss for flows with large weights, thereby causing early timeouts and a reduction in throughput. Our second approach considers a class of loss adaptive weighted AIMD algorithms. This approach scales by an order of magnitude compared to the previous approach, but is more susceptible to short-term unfairness and is sensitive to the accuracy of loss estimates. We conclude that adapting the congestion control parameters to the loss characteristics is critical to scalable service differentiation; on the other hand, estimating loss characteristics using purely end-to-end mechanisms is an inherently difficult problem. © 2004 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Ramya Raghavendra, Jorge Lobo, et al.
SIGCOMM 2012
Berk Birand, Murtaza Zafer, et al.
MASS 2011
Yun Hou, Murtaza Zafer, et al.
COMSNETS 2009
Ting He, Shiyao Chen, et al.
INFOCOM 2012